RPI winds up with big win

Watching from afar on Saturday, I saw the RPI-Alfred score and I
was wowed to see the Engineers up 24-0 after one quarter against
the nationally ranked Saxons on Homecoming at East Campus Athletic
Village. After seeing some of the early struggles this season for
RPI, I was glad to see them succeed -- because after all, parity is
not a bad thing.

It was the Mike Hermann and Austin Caswell in the first, as the
two connected on three scores in the initial 15 minutes of
play.

But as we all know, games are 60 minutes long, and Alfred, to
its credit, never quit or gave up.

It took a couple of quarters, but a touchdown pass to Ryan Thon
with 8 seconds left in the third quarter tied the game at 24, and
it was evident the contest could come down to the final
possession.

Which is exactly what it did.

On the last drive for RPI, Hermann connected with Pat McCarthy
for 25 yards with seconds remaining. With six seconds remaining in
regulation, senior kicker Peter Nilson came on to make a 38-yard
field goal, matching his career-long, to give RPI the upset
win.

“We didn’t have much choice (to not go for the field
goal),” said RPI coach Joe King on Tuesday. “We
didn’t have much time left. Peter’s done the job for us
for three years. I was thinking if we get a good snap and a good
hold, he has a better than average chance of making it.”

But then Alfred called time out. Then a second time. Then once
more.

“At that point, it’s a matter of not thinking about
the pressure, just thinking about the emotion and everything
I’ve worked on over the summer with my kicking coach,”
Nilson told Andrew Santillo from the Troy Record.

“They tried to ice him three times, and he stayed loose
and made the kick,” King said.

When asked if the NCAA should change the rule like the NFL where
a team can’t call multiple timeouts to ice the kicker, he
didn’t think they should.

“Everybody does it. I’m not sure how productive it
is, but I think they should let them kick,” King said.

Nilson almost didn’t make it out to make his winning kick.
He had been injured at a point in the Rochester game and
didn’t practice very much during the bye week.

“I’m glad we had the bye for him to get
healthier,” King said. “He started kicking on Tuesday
and he didn’t do well, but he did better on Thursday.
It’s a good thing we had him for Saturday.”

The long and windy road

Team

Into the wind

With the wind

Alfred

29 plays, 66 yards

51 plays, 303 yards

RPI

26 plays, 81 yards

37 plays, 208 yards

With the win and Union’s loss to St. Lawrence, RPI heads
to Canton on Saturday with first place in the Liberty League on the
line.

“St. Lawrence is a very dangerous team,” King said.
“They have good kids on both sides, they’re well
coached and they can hurt you in a number of ways. We’re
going to have to play well to beat them.”

Hermann earned the Offensive Player of the Week award in the
Liberty League for his productive day and Nilson earned the Special
Teams player of the week award for his clutch kick.

“I hope we don’t have to have him make a kick like
that, I don’t think I can take too many of those,” King
said. “But if he does, I hope he can do it again.”

The last time RPI defeated a ranked opponent was Nov. 18, 2006,
when the Engineers defeated Cortland State 26-7 in the ECAC
Northeast Championship game.

In a career full of terrific moments, Delaware Valley senior
tailback Matt Cook had yet another one on Saturday against Middle
Atlantic Conference foe Wilkes. Cook was the offense for the
Aggies, carrying the ball 42 times for 324 yards, a school record,
and four touchdowns in their 30-18 win.

The record-setting performance crushed the old record of 254 set
by Eric Reynolds against Albright in 1984. In the fourth quarter,
having already broken the school record, Cook ran for 37 yards to
go over 300 and seal the game for the Aggies.

No. 9 DVC had eight turnovers, and Cook’s performance was
huge in keeping the Aggies unblemished in conference play.

Next week, DVC faces off against the other MAC unbeaten,
Lycoming in what could be the best matchup of the weekend.

For Wilkes, Chris Horn kicked three field goals, from 29, 40 and
49 yards respectively.

Rowan upsets Cortland
The Profs knocked Cortland from the ranks of the unbeaten with a
20-17 win against the Red Dragons. Rowan’s junior running
back Steve Hevalow ran for 139 yards on 27 carries and scored a
touchdown to lead the Profs to the upset. In the fourth quarter,
tight end Kevin DelleDonne caught a touchdown with about six
minutes left in the game for the eventual game winning points.

Next week, Rowan visits Brockport in another New Jersey Athletic
Conference matchup.

Despite the parity in the East, more East teams are either
firmly entrenched in or sniffing it. Delaware Valley, Montclair
State, St. John Fisher are all in it, while Alfred, Cortland State,
Rowan and Lycoming are in the receiving votes category. Critics
might point to a weak East, I say it shows the top to bottom
strength of the conference.

Here’s proof: The Merchant Marine Academy beat Rochester
for the first time in team history on Saturday, a 48-19 rout. Kings
Point was 0-14 against the Yellowjackets until Saturday.

Sophomore Mariner John-Leon Gosselin rushed for 157 yards and
two touchdowns as the Mariners matched the number of conference
wins, two, with their total from 2008 and 2009.

Another example: St. Lawrence surges into the lead by a game
after beating Union 24-13 on Saturday.

Montclair State moved up two spots in the D3football.com poll to
14 after a 35-20 win over Buffalo State. Red Hawks quarterback Tom
Fischer had an efficient day, completing 13 of 18 passes for 290
yards and four touchdowns, three to Dan Keegan. Keegan had six
catches overall for 133 yards as Montclair State kept its winning
streak in conference alive at 14.

Despite beating Hartwick, St. John Fisher moved down a spot in
the D3football.com poll to 19 after a 41-14 win.

The Cardinals set a school-record with eight interceptions
against the Hawks, which is two shy of the NCAA record set by St.
Thomas against St. Olaf in 1983.

Someone had to throw all those interceptions and most of them
were courtesy of starting quarterback Kyle Morenus, who had six,
two shy of the NCAA record for one game.

St. John Fisher sophomore Ryan Kramer had a career-high three
touchdowns as the Cardinals improved to 7-0 on the season.

Odds and ends
Kean senior running back Jay Gwaltney had his second straight
200-yard rushing day, rushing for 209 yards on 26 carries and four
touchdowns in a 35-14 win over Western Connecticut.

Sophomore Ty Hughes had a career day for Albright as the Lions
bounced back from a rout against Lycoming with a 38-14 win over
King’s. Hughes carried the ball 22 times for 153 yards and
three touchdowns. Hughes had only rushed for 61 yards in his young
career before Saturday.

Staying in the MAC, Josh Kleinfelter rushed for more than 100
yards for the fifth week in a row as the Warriors blasted Widener
31-7. Lycoming and Delaware Valley battle next week for MAC
supremacy.

Springfield has proven it can win the track meets, rushing for
an average of more than 400 yards this season, but on Saturday, the
Pride proved they can win the defensive battles too, beating Utica
20-16. Josh Carter led the attack at quarterback for the Pride.

UC senior linebacker Travis Ladd had 16 tackles on the day, one
of the highest totals in program history.

The College of New Jersey defense suffocated Morrisville,
forcing the Mustangs into six interceptions in a 30-6 NJAC win.

Lebanon Valley senior running back Ben Guiles rushed for four
touchdowns against FDU-Florham, tying a school record in a 33-21
win. All four touchdowns came in the second half as Guiles also
crossed the 2,000-yard mark for his career.

Andrew Lovell is an associate news editor for ESPN.com and a former sports staff writer/editor for the New Britain Herald (Conn.). He has contributed freelance work to ESPN Rise and has been a regular contributor to D3football.com since 2007. Andrew has also written for a number of daily newspapers in New York, including the Poughkeepsie Journal, Ithaca Journal and Auburn Citizen. He graduated from Ithaca College in 2008 with B.A. in Sport Media and a minor in writing. A native of Hyde Park, N.Y., Andrew currently resides in New Britain.